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  1. KnewFontWaisted by Ingrimayne Type, $9.00
    KnewFontWaisted is a informal font that was produced by distorting the handwritten font KnewFont. It is more concave and compacted than the original.
  2. Creatiny by Forberas Club, $18.00
    Creatiny is modern handwritten. Recommended to use this font for wedding party, invitation, memorable moment, love story and many more with special moment.
  3. Rush Berry by Forberas Club, $16.00
    Rush Berry font is handwritten style. Recommended to use for wedding party, invitation, memorable moment, love story and many more with special moment.
  4. Carols Night by Maulana Creative, $12.00
    Give your designs an authentic handcrafted feel. �Carols Night Christmas Theme Font� is perfectly suited to stationery, logos and much more. Many Thanks!
  5. Aston by Fontfabric, $40.00
    Aston is a custom sans serif font which is applicable for any type of graphic design - web, logo, print, motion graphics, and more.
  6. La Pamalia by Fikryal, $14.00
    La Paloma is a handwritten font, and is perfect for your needs such as: logos, posters, handwriting, mockup, magazines, business cards and more.
  7. Sunfort by Maulana Creative, $14.00
    Give your designs an authentic handcrafted feel. Sunfort Signature Script Font is perfectly suited to stationery, logos and much more. Many Thanks! MaulanaCreative
  8. Buttersoy by Maulana Creative, $15.00
    Give your designs an authentic handcrafted feel. Buttersoy Beautiful Handwritten Script Font is perfectly suited to stationery, logos and much more. Maulana Creative
  9. Lovebus by Gleb Guralnyk, $13.00
    Hello! Introducing vintage hippie style font "Lovebus". It has smooth authentique design and 26 automatically replaceable ligatures to make your text more original.
  10. Bagiles by Forberas Club, $16.00
    Bagiles is modern handwritten. Recommended to use this font for wedding party, invitation, memorable moment, love story and many more with special moment.
  11. Janda Truly Madly Deeply by Kimberly Geswein, $5.00
    This unicase font features little curls and swirls to make it a little more flavorful. It is fun, optimistic, and upbeat in personality.
  12. Klenthing by Dieza Design, $11.00
    Klenthing is a simple typeface. It's handwritten and is perfect for invitations, branding, blog posts, greeting cards, DIY projects, labels, quotes, and more!
  13. Diversal Brush by ijemrockart, $10.00
    Introducing Give your designs an authentic brush handcrafted feel. “Diversal Brush Font” is perfectly suited to stationery, logos and much more. Thank you,
  14. Message Helpers JNL by Jeff Levine, $29.00
    More cartoon illustrations, sales builders, ornaments, embellishments and miscellany come your way with Message Helpers JNL; all re-drawn from vintage source material.
  15. Thefrost by Maulana Creative, $11.00
    Give your designs an authentic handcrafted feel. Thefrost Modern Script Font is perfectly suited to stationery, logos and much more. Many Thanks! MaulanaCreative
  16. Monday Bay by Letterhend, $9.00
    Monday Bay is a cute handwriting brush font that you can use for many things. Perfect for cute quotes, branding, and much more.
  17. Mad World by Maulana Creative, $13.00
    Give your designs an authentic handcrafted feel. �Mad World Casual Signature Font� is perfectly suited to stationery, logos and much more. Many Thanks!
  18. Rillies by Maulana Creative, $12.00
    Give your designs an authentic handcrafted feel. "Rillies Modern Signature Font" is perfectly suited to stationery, logos and much more. Thanks for Watching!
  19. Claudya Script by Herlan Nawwi, $16.00
    Claudya is a beautiful and feminine font. This script is equipped with alternate characters, making the possibilities of design more varied and unique.
  20. Tribalism by Intellecta Design, $19.90
    Tribalism is a dingbat/flourish font inspired by tattoos and more. Use these ornaments to decorate your type settings and or design work.
  21. Boardwalk Avenue Rough by Fenotype, $30.00
    Boardwalk Avenue Rough is a textured version of Boardwalk Avenue. It’s a robust type collection of three styles and two weights of each. It’s divided into Boardwalk Pen, Boardwalk Antiqua and Boardwalk Serif. Boardwalk Avenue’s core is a connected mono linear script that works fantastic when paired with either of the impressive serif styles. All the fonts work great on their own but try putting them all together for a complete display font setup for a project. Here’s a short introduction on what’s included: Boardwalk Avenue Rough Pen is a connected Script. It’s great for headlines, quotes or in packaging. It has a casual hand drawn vibe to it but it’s clean and legible. It’s equipped with automatic Contextual Alternates that keep the connections smooth and versatile. For instance when you type double letter another of them will automatically change to add variation. Or if you type “i” for example, as a first letter after space or after capital letter the code will add starting point to the letter to keep the letterforms more balanced. If you need more ambitious letterforms you can try Swash or Titling Alternates -there’s alternates for every standard letter and seek for even more alternates from the glyph palette. Boardwalk Avenue Rough Antiqua is a high contrast serif with strong character. It’s great for glamorous headlines or as a logotype. Boardwalk Avenue Rough Serif is a low contrast serif with bulky character. It’s great for strong and sturdy headlines or as a logotype.
  22. Metro New One by JAB'M, $15.00
    The main inspiration is from Art Nouveau which flourished in Europe at the end of the 19th and beginning of the 20th centuries. This design included furniture (Majorelle, Lalique) and architecture (Victor Horta, Henry Van de Velde, Gaudi, Alfons Mucha). But Hector Guimard remains the favorite for all aspects of its art and, of course, its typefaces used on the Parisian Metropolitan posters. In particular, the various kerning of the various letters he used to make the poster a whole design from singular designs, leading to numerous variations. As a designer, I first worked with the individual glyphs Hector Guimard designed and I discovered that they vary constantly from a poster to another, depending on the overall result he was looking for. Another difficulty in transferring his design to printing is that there was no lower case. I was excited to create the whole font from the original designs of Hector Guimard, incorporating its variations and "crazy kerning". After several attempts, it appeared to be impossible to include all variations and I slightly moved to my own new design as a complete font, upper and lower case, with kerning. I voluntarily limited the ascenders and descenders to the usual typography so that it can be used from 10 / 12 points. This version can be used to edit letters and books in the context of Art, specially Art Nouveau and Art Deco of course, posters of any kind.
  23. Storyville by Canada Type, $29.95
    This is the redrawn and expanded version of an alphabet Rebecca Alaccari made back in 2009 as a bespoke font for a tourism agency looking to recapture the appeal of New Orleans after the hurricane Katrina disaster robbed it of its core industries. The brief back then was to "revive the unique spirit of what always made Nola great for new adults, which is the excellent combination of history, romance, food and music." No word of a lie, the brief actually contained "new adults." Storyville contains two interchangeable sets of forms drawn in the doodly, loose and organic way now conspicuously popular with today's young designers, almost every one of whom thinks they will get to design something for a boutique coffee bar somewhere. Well, this whole thing perhaps means freedom, youth, fun, happiness, good stuff like that. But just in case, a little caution doesn't hurt: Use this font only if you know what you're doing. We don't want to go back to the 1990s. Please. We were nearly done for by that exposure the first time around. The ligatures feature in this font does some pseudo-randomization, so the forms in doubled letters don't repeat. Serious fun can be had by also applying the stylistic alternates feature, or picking a letter in the middle of a setting and disabling the ligatures feature. Or various sequences of all that. If you don't like any of that stuff, just forget about it. Uh, wutever.
  24. Orthotopes Oblique - Personal use only
  25. Minotaur by CastleType, $59.00
    Minotaur is an original monoline design based on an Oscan (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oscan_language ) votive inscription from the second century B.C.E. The letterforms immediately caught my eye in the wonderful book, Lettering by Hermann Degering, and I decided to create a typeface based on them with only enough compromises to make it usable as a modern alphabet. Not quite as straightforward as I had hoped. For example, the Oscan language (the predominant language in the Italian peninsula before the ascendance of Latin), has no letter "O", so the distinctive curve of the "D" was used as the model for the rounded letters "C" and "G" and more subtly for "O" and "Q"; this shape is also echoed in the original design of "B", "P" and "R". Also, the Oscan letterforms for A, K, L, M, N, S, and U are rather quaint, so I've included modern forms as alternates. Minotaur offers the best of both worlds: Just as the mythical Minotaur is half man and half bull, the font Minotaur is half modern and half ancient. Thanks to OpenType features (stylistic sets), you can easily switch from ancient letterforms to modern (if you have an OpenType-savvy application such as Adobe InDesign) for Latin, Greek, and Cyrillic alphabets. Minotaur supports all modern European languages, including Modern (monotonic) Greek and those that use the Cyrillic alphabet. And, yes, it supports Oscan, both right-facing and left-facing. Minotaur includes 3 OpenType Stylistic Sets: 1 - converts ancient (default) letterforms (A, K, L, M, N, S, and U) to modern alternates; 2 - converts Latin letterforms to equivalent left-facing (standard) Oscan letterforms; 3 - converts Latin letterforms to equivalent right-facing Oscan letterforms.
  26. Gyoza by Ahmad Jamaludin, $15.00
    Introducing Gyoza - Font Family (4 Fonts) Gyoza - was designed in late 2022 and published on January 2023. The Typeface was inspired by the 90’s playful cartoons and comic books. This font comes with 4 weights; Regular, Semibold, Bold, and Black. Gyoza - available with the variable fonts in weights and the Ink Trap. With the regular style, you'll have the correct anatomy of the fonts. with the Ink Trap style, it added more extreme space on the Ink Trap. Gyoza - contains everything you need to create stunning typography – from headline fonts to body text fonts - all in one place. Whether you're starting out or you've been designing for years, Gyoza has everything you need. Can be used for modern and vintage designs, and also can be easily paired with some graphic elements (Illustration, Photography) this font is perfect for, Logotype, Branding, Title, and Packaging. So take your design skills up a notch and get started on some fresh new projects with Gyoza today! Similar Item: Gunydrops : LINK HERE Kelpo : LINK HERE Swipe : LINK HERE Replay : LINK HERE What you get : Gyoza Regular Gyoza Semibold Gyoza Bold Gyoza Black Features : Ligatures Instructions ( Access special characters, even in circuit design ) Letters, numbers, symbols, and punctuation No special software is required to use this typeface even work in Canva Multilingual Support Language Support: Danish, English, Estonian, Filipino, Finnish, French, Friulian, Galician, German, Gusii, Indonesian, Irish, Italian, Luxembourgish, Norwegian Bokmål, Norwegian Nynorsk, Nyankole, Oromo, Portuguese, Romansh, Rombo, Spanish, Swedish, Swiss-German, Uzbek (Latin) Please contact us if you have any questions. Enjoy crafting and thanks for supporting us! Come and say hello over on Instagram! https://www.instagram.com/dharmas.studio/ Regards, Dharmas Studio
  27. Belgato by Molly Suber Thorpe, $9.00
    Belgato is a vintage-inspired typeface with delicate details. It comes in six weights – plus italics! – for a total of 12 fonts, making it a highly versatile display face. The variable font version allows for ultimateweight and slant customization in print and web. Belgato has Latin, Greek, and Cyrillic alphabets, and supports dozens of languages, making it ideal for multilingual branding, publications, ads, social media, and more! I had so much fun designing this typeface, playing with classic serif letterforms to create an elegant, mid-century modern vibe. Belgato Light is fresh, airy, and delicate – perfect for feminine branding. By contrast, Belgato Black boasts fat curves with thin details, perfectly-suited to bold layouts and retro branding projects. Each Belgato font has 665 glyphs, encompassing: - the Latin alphabet (including hundreds of accented characters) - the Modern Greek alphabet - the Cyrillic alphabet (for Russian, Ukrainian, Bulgarian, and Serbo-Croatian) - discretionary ligatures - stylistic and alternate glyphs - numerals (lining and old style), small figures, and fractions - extensive punctuation, symbols, and diacritical markings Software: No special software is required to use Belgato fonts. You can even use these fonts with Canva! To access Belgato’s variable font features, ligatures, and stylistic alternates, it is best to use software that supports these functions (Adobe programs, Corel Draw, Sketch, etc). Languages: Belgato supports dozens of languages which use the Latin, Greek, and Cyrillic alphabets. Among the most common languages it supports are: English, Bulgarian, Catalan, Croatian, Czech, Danish, Dutch, Filipino, Finnish, Flemish, French, German, Modern Greek, Hungarian, Icelandic, Indonesian, Italian, Luxembourgish, Maltese, Norwegian, Polish, Portuguese, Russian, Serbo-Croatian, Spanish, Swedish, Swiss German, Turkish, and Ukrainian.
  28. Monotalic by Kostic, $30.00
    Monotalic was created as a fun experiment, exploring better solutions for the monospaced type design. Most monospaced (fixed-width) typefaces have the same main design problem regarding the lowercase – filling the empty space around l, f, i, j and r. That usually brings the addition of slab serifs to those narrow characters, causing many monospaced fonts to look and feel alike. Monotalic solves that problem by adopting the handwritten (or cursive) form for those problematic characters, which allows them to be defined in more strokes, thus getting a better distribution of form in that fixed-width space. On the other hand, cursive writing usually lacks the legibility of a Roman (Regular upright) style, so Monotalic was created to be a hybrid, taking the best of both worlds. Monospaced fonts today are mostly used for coding. Modern code editors use colored text in order to differentiate between different kinds of code. So, in that environment there’s actually no need for traditional text styling by adding Italics, Bold or other styles, because the code lines are overstated as it is. That is why Monotalic focuses on one style only, in three widths and four weights. The weights allow users to choose the perfect contrast of text on screen, depending on their monitor resolution and background color in the editor. Movie scripts are almost exclusively set in 12pt Courier. It became the industry standard because when set in the specific “screenplay format" it helps with the breakdown of the schedule and budgeting process of the film production. Although it looks completely different, text set in Monotalic (Normal width) will take the same amount of space as Courier.
  29. Zombie - Unknown license
  30. Castorgate - Distort - Unknown license
  31. Circus train - Unknown license
  32. Castorgate - Messed - Unknown license
  33. Lady Copra Wide - Unknown license
  34. Castorgate - Upright - Unknown license
  35. Luciferius Infernitus - Unknown license
  36. Castorgate - Rough - Unknown license
  37. Erinal Narrow - Unknown license
  38. Sabril - Unknown license
  39. Endor Alt - Unknown license
  40. KooRear - Unknown license
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